Prof. Álvaro Duarte de Oliveira Aalto University
Connected Smart Cities Network
CKIR Workshop 2011
Overview
• Big Challenges of our Cities
• Smart Cities
• Open Innovation and Living Labs
• ENoLL and Globalization
• PERIPHÈRIA Project
• Smart Cities Portfolio Working Group
• Connected Smart Cities Network
• Conclusions and Recommendations
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Big Challenges for our Cities
• Wellbeing and assisted living. Health and ageing
• Climate change
• Energy sustainability
• Demographic shifts
• Sustainable water and food supplies
• Green mobility
• Sustainable housing
• Waste management
• Security
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Why the attention?
• Because open innova-on and smart ci-es emerge as a focal cross-‐cu6ng theme and strategy in present discussions about the Future Internet, Living Labs, and Innova-on and Compe--veness-‐driven (Urban) Development.
• We need to beEer understand the challenges and the pathways to the ‘smart-‐er city’ in the context of what Europeans have entrusted collec-vely in their ‘smart ci-es’ outlook
• Respond to the quest of the research and academic communi-es to iden-fy the defining components, cri-cal insights and ins-tu-onal means to create Smart Ci-es
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Source: PERIPHÈRIA (Krassimira Paskaleva)
EU Smart Cities Innovation Policies
• It is in the heart of i2010–role of end-‐users in the Digital Society in sustaining services, applica-ons and content genera-on for scalability and mass-‐market
• Bringing together Future Internet technologies with Living Labs methodologies and prac-ces as a viable way forward
• “2020 Strategy” emphasizes smart, sustainable and inclusive growth; innova-on is where progress is mostly needed
• Other EU programmes -‐Lisbon and Gothenburg strategies, Territorial Agenda, URBACT, Leipzig Urban Charter call for using all urban poten-als to address all dimensions of SD at the same -me and with the same weight through innova-on.
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Source: PERIPHÈRIA (Krassimira Paskaleva)
Dimension of Smart Cities Open Innovation
• In developing collabora-ve processes between local ‘smart ci-zens’, government and developer communi-es
• In offering a new way for ci-zens to share not just in the design but also in the delivery of services and contribute their own wisdom and experience in ways that can broaden and strengthen services and make them more effec-ve
• In providing a viable agenda for a smart city system change
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Source: PERIPHÈRIA (Krassimira Paskaleva)
Smart Cities emerging trends • Social interac;on is in the heart of the smart city model, in which the
infrastructures and services are jointly and dynamically discovered, invoked and composed by providers and users alike.
• Crea;ng open ‘digital ci;zen-‐developer’ communi;es and establishing private-‐public-‐people partnerships (PPPPs) to find dynamic and imagina-ve ways to interact and create, drawing inspira-on and experience from open innova-on and sustainable urban development.
• Deploying convergent Future Internet plaLorms and services for the promo-on of sustainable life and work styles in and across emergent networks of ‘smart’ ci-es.
• Crea;ng Smart Open Innova;on Urban Ecosystems –specific urban se6ngs or innova-on playgrounds which combine innova-on and social and commercial ac-vi-es to enable open innova-on and showcase the benefits for locali-es of growing smarter and more sustainable.
• Building new collabora;ons and networks so ci-es can understand innova-on, innovators understand ci-es, ci-zens to become effec-vely engaged and users to become content and service producers and deliverers.
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Source: PERIPHÈRIA (Krassimira Paskaleva)
SUSTAINABLE SOLUTIONS
• Wicked problems call for diverse types of knowledge, resource, participation and collaboration.
• Behaviour change requires the motivation of millions of individuals and their communities; solutions cannot be pushed.
• New, distributed and highly participatory systems imply new roles for public and private spheres: demand/user/citizen driven open RDI enabled by ICT.
• Living Labs: open eco-systems engage and motivate stakeholders, stimulate collaboration, create lead markets and enable behavior transformation.
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The Living Labs approach and methodology setting for open innovation
• As a plaXorm for implemen-ng an open innova-on model to pilot different ini-a-ves towards the Europe 2020 perspec-ve of well-‐being and sustainability.
• As a user-‐driven innova-on ecosystems based on a business-‐ci-zens-‐government partnership to enable users to take ac-ve part in the research, development and innova-on process
• As an ecosystem in which new products and services are created, prototyped and used in real-‐-me environments
• Where users are not treated as object in the innova-on process or as mere customers, but as early stage contributors and innovators
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Source: PERIPHÈRIA (Krassimira Paskaleva)
274 LLS 236 EU LLs
38 Non-EU LLs
1st Wave – 19
2nd Wave – 32
3rd Wave – 68
4th Wave – 93
5th Wave – 62
Total 274
European Network of Living Labs (1/2)
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European Network of Living Labs (2/2)
• Living Labs enable the co-‐crea-on of user-‐driven and human-‐centric research, development and innova-on of technologies, products and services focused on well-‐being of people
• ENoLL contributes to the crea-on of a dynamic, mul--‐layer and mul-dimensional European Innova-on ecosystem
• ENoLL aims at the Future Internet, Living Labs and Smart Ci-es convergence
• ENoLL globaliza-on fosters open interna-onal collabora-on to solve the big challenges of our -mes, thus contribu-ng to global well being , prosperity and stability
• ENoLL facilitates the coopera-on and the exploita-on of synergies between members and groups of members (thema-c domains), Smart Ci-es is one of the ENoLL Thema-c Domains
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Smart Ci;es PorLolio Working Group
Co-‐Crea-ng Cross-‐Border Synergies and Networking for Future Internet enabled services in Smart Ci-es
Dave Carter, Head, Manchester Digital Development Agency
(MDDA), Manchester City Council, UK
The CIP Smart Cities Portfolio Projects
Smart Ci;zens in Smart Ci;es
6 more projects call for negotiation to start before end of 2011
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Smart Cities Projects Roadmap
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CitySDK
Sustainable Smart Ci-es
Sustainable Smart Regions
2007 2011
Supporting the Smart Cities Portfolio
• Crea-ng synergies between the emerging Smart Ci-es network, Living Labs and the Future Internet community
• Building on network experience to date: Euroci-es, European Network of Living Labs (ENoLL), Future Internet Assembly (FIA)
• www.euroci-es.eu • www.openlivinglabs.eu • www.future-‐internet.eu
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Smart Cities Portfolio Priorities
• Connected Smart Ci-es Network launched: Helsinki conference, Nov. 2010
• Currently developing the workplan of the Smart Ci-es PorXolio Working Group: City of Manchester is Chair
• Work in partnership with Euroci-es, ENoLL, FIA and other networks to promote Smart Ci-es and plan collabora-ve work, including knowledge exchange
• Communica-ons plan being developed in partnership with the European Commission
• Exploi-ng projects’ links with key decision makers at city, regional, na-onal and interna-onal level
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Smart Cities Outcomes
• Se6ng out the basis for long term collabora-on between Smart Ci-es, Living Labs and Future Internet
• Crea-ng open innova-on networks for new smart apps and services for city use-‐cases and test-‐beds
• Adding People in to create PPPPs – Public-‐Private-‐People-‐Partners – Smart Ci-es needs Smart Ci-zens
• Co-‐crea-ng innova-ve new business models for service delivery
• Suppor-ng new projects as they develop
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Leading to Sustainable Smart Cities
• Virtual connections strengthen human togetherness and revive local communities and values
• Empower the neighbourhoods to take ownership of their local activities and influence decisions that may affect them
• Connect neighbourhoods and encourage and facilitate citizen collaboration for common good
• Engage mass participation and drive behaviour transformation to address the big challenge of our time
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Connected Smart Cities Network (1/2)
• Connected Smart Ci-es Network idea – CKIR Workshop – (Eero Hols-lla, Álvaro Oliveira) – August 2008
• APOLLON Project – November 2009 • FIREBALL Project – May 2010 • Smart Ci-es Project PorXolio (1) – November 2010 • Connected Smart Ci-es Network launch – November
2010 • Connected Smart Ci-es Network opera-onaliza-on –
CKIR Workshop – August 2011 • Smart Ci-es Project PorXolio (2) – September 2011
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• Connected Smart Cities Network was launched under the EU-funded (7th Framework Programme) FIREBALL-project in Helsinki on November 18th, 2010 by the cities of Amsterdam, Manchester, Lisbon, Barcelona and Helsinki.
• Aims to establish a collaboration mechanism through which a network of Smart Cities across Europe engages in long-term collaboration for adopting User Driven Open Innovation to explore the opportunities of the Future Internet and to support cities to innovate in order to tackle the major societal challenges faced by Europe, such as sustainable mobility, climate change, energy security or our ageing population.
• Connected Smart Cities Network in ENoLL as a Thematic Domain.
Connected Smart Cities Network (2/2)
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Conclusions: Smart Cities • Cities are being transformed by the impact of globalization and rapid
technological evolution. Sustainable Urban Well Being trends are emerging driven by the direct participation of the citizens. This includes user behaviour transformation achieved by the participatory environment enabled by the LivingLabs and implemented by innovative collaborative SMEs.
• Cities are increasingly becoming dynamic Living Environments requiring the capacity to enable and adapt to fast technological, societal and cultural changes. Living Lab collaboration methodologies can be the answer to address these changes and support the engagement and exploitation of business opportunities by SMEs.
• Sustainable Energy and mobility are important trends of the emerging Well Being Urban Living Lab Paradigm. Local energy micro-generation, distribution (Smart Metering/Smart Grid) and storage require new business models and new policies where innovative SMEs can have a major role in the experimentation, implementation and exploitation of the new emerging business enabled by Future Internet, Internet of Things and Social Innovation.
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Conclusions: Sustainable Smart Cities
• Sustainable Smart cities are open-innovation ecosystems where creativity and knowledge co-creation and sharing naturally flourishes stimulated and supported by open innovative policies and future internet environments.
• Networked Sustainable Smart Cities acting as drivers and enablers of user driven open innovation will be the platforms for the societal transformations of the future.
• Future Internet technologies, Living Labs and Social Innovation enable Sustainable Smart Cities co-creation where citizens’ sense of belonging and identity, wellbeing and togetherness, form a better and happier society.
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THANK YOU
[email protected] Skype: alvaroduarteoliveira
+351 91 666 66 66 +351 21 486 67 84
August 25, 2011
Prof. Álvaro Duarte de Oliveira Aalto University
CKIR Workshop 2011, Helsinki
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